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Ford Cross Drilled
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99-04 Ford F350 Cross Drilled Brake Rotors Front US $104.95
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99-04 Ford F350 Cross Drilled Brake Rotors F+R US $204.95
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Power Stop K1872 Rear Ceramic Brake Pad and Cross Drilled/Slotted Combo Rotor One-Click Brake Kit List Price: $403.82 Sale Price: $169.74 |
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Power Stop brake kits include a complete set of cross-drilled and slotted rotors and high performance evolution ceramic pads. It is made simple by matching the pads and rotors for a big brake feel without the big price. The Power Stop brake kit offers more pad bite than other leading brands without noise and dust. If you need a fast, easy and affordable solution for better braking, then you need the Power Stop brake kit. |
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Front & Rear Cross Drilled / Slotted Rotor Package + Premium Ceramic Pads 1994 - 2004 Ford Mustang Cobra / Mach 1 ( Excludes GT and V - 6 Models ) List Price: $279.99 Sale Price: $199.99 |
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PLEASE CONTACT US IF YOU ARE NOT SURE ABOUT the FITMENT FOR YOUR APPLICATION!! Add a Brakewerkz Tek Series slotted / drilled brake package to your vehicle for improved stopping! Less heat, less thermal gassing, channeled away dust! The Powerstop Z16 Ceramic pads produce less dust than conventional pads 30% more stopping power over OEM. |
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Power Stop K1944 Front/Rear Ceramic Brake Pad and Cross Drilled/Slotted Combo Rotor One-Click Brake Kit List Price: $1,014.84 Sale Price: $424.60 |
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Power Stop brake kits include a complete set of cross-drilled and slotted rotors and high performance evolution ceramic pads. It is made simple by matching the pads and rotors for a big brake feel without the big price. The Power Stop brake kit offers more pad bite than other leading brands without noise and dust. If you need a fast, easy and affordable solution for better braking, then you need the Power Stop brake kit. |
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The new Honda Civic Si concept made its world debut last February 10, 2004 at the Chicago Auto Show. The concept provided hints at the styling and performance direction of the new breed of Civic Si coupes to be introduced later this year.
This new production Civic Si Coupe will serve as the performance leader for the 2006 Civic model lineup which will be completely redesigned. The 2006 Civic will feature more emotional styling, enhanced performance, and the latest generation of "intelligent" i-VTEC engine technology. The new 2006 Civic lineup will include a 4-door Sedan, a 2-door Coupe and Si Coupe, an even more fuel efficient Civic Hybrid and a natural-gas powered Civic GX.
The latest Civic Si Concept marks the 20th anniversary of the Civic Si Legacy in the US. With a 200-horsepower, 16-valve, DOHC i-VTEC engine with an 8,000 rpm red line, mated to a close ratio 6-speed manual transmission, this new Civic Si further establishes its performance heritage. A helical-type limited slip differential that improves launch traction and cornering performance helps put all that power on the ground. Among the many performance features of the Civic Si Concept include 18-inch cast aluminum wheels, 225/40R18 high performance tires and 4-wheel disc brakes with large cross-drilled brake rotors and 4-piston Brembo calipers.
"The 2006 Civic Si Coupe will be the most powerful, fastest and fun-to-drive Si we've ever put on the street, and the Civic Si Concept sets the direction in terms of its styling, package and performance," said John Mendel, senior vice president of American Honda. "It's part of a new family of Civic vehicles that build on the already class-leading values of the Civic in terms of safety, styling, performance and fuel efficiency."
The Civic Si Concept is designed to be an "Advanced Personal Compact. It features a sweeping rooflines and ultra-fast windshield rake that highlights the vehicle's one-motion profile, low, wide stance, and superior aerodynamic performance. The forward motion conveyed by the overall vehicle shape is further accentuated by a long trunk deck and a frontward sloping bumper. for better performance, the gap between the tire and the body has been minimized thanks to optimized wheel openings. Boosting further the Civic Si's sleek aerodynamic features are and side aero kit, rear deck wing and a lower rear bumper diffuser with an integrated center exhaust system.
The 2006 Civic Si Coupe will be the sixth generation Si, which first appeared as a three-door hatchback in 1986 with subsequent Civic Si models appearing in 1989, 1992, 1999 and 2002. The production Si will make its world debut at the 2005 Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show in November. The Civic Si Concept was designed at Honda R&D America's Los Angeles design center.
Meanwhile, Honda Civic and Civic Si parts can be purchased even in the comfort of our own homes. Dozens of sites offer excellent deals on Honda Civic Si parts that are definitely hard to miss. One of the best sites to purchase from is Parts Train. Check out http://www.partstrain.com and browse through the thousands of choices of Honda Civic Si Parts.
Jenny McLane is a 36 year old native of Iowa and has a knack for research on cars and anything and everything about it. She works full time as a Market Analyst for one of the leading car parts suppliers in the country today.
New Product Design and Development: the Seven Reasons to Think About the Future
Introduction
Everybody who is in the business of New Product Development knows what a complex process it is. This is a multidisciplinary activity requiring coherence between almost all the functions of manufacturing firms.
Until recently though those who were called ‘product designers‘ played in this process a role of rather a secondary importance. They were briefed by marketing, engineering departments, ad agencies with an only task: ‘We want this look nice‘...
Then something went wrong. And those days are over. Today, Design Council Chairman prepares reports to the UK Prime-minister on how ‘UK businesses can stay ahead of their global rivals by drawing on the country's world-leading design capabilities'. And at Davos, during the World Economic Forum held under the theme ‘The Creative Imperative', world leaders discuss how to apply design thinking to survive in the uncertainty and complexity global economy brings.
Approach to design in Russia is still at the level of aesthetics and, at best, ergonomics. In the meantime, design can be applied as a strategic business tool at least in the two directions. Inside the company design can become a strong management tool for aligning - and, thus, optimization - all the processes of NPD through focusing on the needs of all stakeholders for whom the product is developed, through creating consumer-based innovation culture. Outside the company designers have proved to be excellent observers researching into people's unmet needs and, thus, discovering new niches and even new markets.
Developing innovative product: Seven reasons to think about the future is searching into the ways which made design shift from aesthetics towards strategy and discussing how to make most out of design thinking when developing really innovative new products, - both tangible and intangible.
«Only one company can be the cheapest, the others have to use design.»
Rodney Fitch, Chairman Fitch & Co
Reason #1. Fundamental Changes in the World Design Industry
The industry of design is undergoing deep transformation: from now on design is not only for appearance and style. Design is dramatically changing its role from being simply a tactical device to becoming a strategic business tool.
How does it have to do with NPD?
Design today is playing a much more important role during the first, probably, the most critical phase in the whole process of developing new product. This is a stage of strategic planning when you need to understand what to do, what target audience will be involved, what brand values will be pronounced, what new value to your customer this product will bring. It will not be an overstatement to say that it is from this stage success and failure of the new product depends. After all, it is not by accident that this ‘0‘ phase is called the Fuzzy Front End of Innovation...
What happens with designers today?
They expand their capabilities into new to them areas until then being ‘occupied' by marketers, brand specialists and management consultants. They obtain degrees in business and anthropology, psychology and ethnography. And more and more they become ‘human factors' specialists.
«We investigated into fourteen large companies with an annual sales volume from $500 million to $10 billion. We discovered that only four of them had managed to meet plan in terms of timing, functionality of new products and market share. In five cases companies designed new generation's products which were positively evaluated by experts, but at the end these products failed. As it turned out, every time when in an NPD process difficulties occurred, the roots of problems could easily be found at the stage of early planning, when the company had to decide what design the new product will have.»
«In search for new generation's product», Harvard Business Review, 2007
Reason #2. Transformation of Consumption Culture
What are the reasons for the changes in the role design plays in NPD?
Technological revolution provides customers with real power in the market. Today, the question of the utmost importance for brands is how to satisfy people who have an almost endless choice reinforced by instant access to global market.
Thus, the main issue of NPD has dramatically changed:
Until recently it was: ‘What technical/organization/financial/manufacturing possibilities for designing new product we have' (Technology-Driven Strategy);
Now: ‘What else does our customer want?/How can we emphasize with him?/What should we design to make our new brand/product experience as interesting, amazing, exciting as possible'(Consumer-Driven Strategy).
«It's About Wants, Not Needs.
Consumers are saying they have enough stuff, want more experiences - 59% of them say they have all the material things they need.»
Fitch, 2005
Moreover, fusion of virtual and mobile cultures give people the power to manage their own 'marketing environment' regardless of companies business aims:
«3000: Number of advertising messages people are exposed to per day;
90%: Proportion of people who can skip TV ads who do skip TV ads;
80%: Market share of video recorders with ad skipping technology in 2008;
69%: Proportion of people interested in technology that enable them to skip of block advertising.»
Justin Kirby & Paul Marsden (2006). Connected thinking, Oxford, UK
Reason #3. Marketing Research vs. Design Research
Who meets new challenges?
Traditional marketing tools are good to shape already existed in the market ideas, understand whether these ideas have huge market and potential. All anything, but the larger demand for innovation, the more problems with identifying new product opportunities marketing has. Thus, companies have huge difficulties with identifying unmet customer needs since these are largely latent and not easy to formulate by the customers themselves.
By this, intuitive thinking, qualitative approach used by designers is very good for imagining new possibilities. Designers proved to be those folks who have managed to accomplish traditional marketing research with its design research methods based on approaching to human life in all its complexity and versatility.
This was the reason the whole NPD chain turned upside down and today it is not marketers and so called creative agencies tell designers what to do, but design consultancies identify new product opportunities, create design briefs, conduct research, develop a platform for further innovations and even brief ad companies on how to promote the new product.
«Eìery year brings 30,000 new products.
About 90% of the fail despite thorough and expensive market research...»
Harvard Business Review, 2005
«If I'd asked people what they wanted, they would have asked for a better horse...»
Henry Ford
Reason #4. From 'Consumer' to 'Human' Experience
What philosophy is behind design research?
Unlike artificial situations of focus group discussions, designers prefer conducting in-context observations looking at the world through their customers' eyes, empathizing with the soul, mind and body of customer. Philosophy of Zen Buddhism with its total immersion in reality, attention to ordinary life and day-to-day experiences is possibly the best way to describe how they like approaching to work.
Those who combine design thinking with interest in user research are called human fa?tors specialists. They research into total human - not merely customer - experience, investigate how people approach the world, what nuances of interaction with the product, brand, environment is of the most importance for them, what they expect from usage. That's why in development divisions of many companies we can find such new positions as cognitive psychologists, social anthropologists, cross-cultural specialists who adapt products of global brands to markets with different values and mentality, as well as ethnographers. For example, Intel has more than twenty ethnographers among its employees. Microsoft, British Telecom, AT&T, HP, IBM - these and many other companies hire ethnographers who are excellent at watching people during design research.
If in a focus group you ask your potential user what characteristics should product of the future possess, high chances the answer will be in an area of the already known. At best, you will be said how to improve already existed aspects of using, say, a drill. The point is that the customer comes to a shop not to buy the drill. He is looking for a hole in the wall and you can endlessly redesign drill until some day somebody solves the issue of 'a hole in the wall' in some different way. And this will be the innovation.
It is not by accident that design thinking is often called 'out-of-the-box thinking': it is this way of thinking which helps come out beyond 'consumer' experience approach and see a human who has home and in this home he or she wants harmony and cosiness and to reach these one requires a means of mounting the picture they like to the wall. After all, should it be a drill or something else, for this human is not that important...
Reason #5. Design Thinking - Best Tool to Tackle Tacit Knowledge
But why design??
As a real power in the market goes to the customer, and knowledge worker accumulates critical for companies survival knowledge in his/her head, the problem of efficient dealing with tacit knowledge is becoming a real challenge within businesses and organizations. In other words, New Economy requires new way of thinking to tackle ‘ill-defined' tacit knowledge - call it synthetic, lateral, innovative, right-brain, divergent and, of course, design thinking.
In fact, to go from a business concept of a new product to its actual realization, from the world of idea to its materialization, means to be able to combine together controversial, on the one hand and underdetermined, on the other, demands:
1. Consumer's need in the product or service;
2. Viability of new product development for business;
3. Feasibility from the point of view of the required technologies.
«In poems, in novels, in painting the brain seems to find itself able to work very well with material that any computer would have rejected as formless.»
Norbert Wiener
«Today perceptiveness is more important than analysis.»
Peter Drucker
Reason #6. From Product Design to Experience Design
What does all this mean for "new designers"?
An ability to create diverse human experiences, not just physical shapes. Content, not simply form. Workplaces not merely furniture. This is a gift of co-creation, of holistic approach to life and ability to fill it with meaning, emotions and lifestyle drivers.
Today, leading design consultancies position themselves as talents in creating a "complete product, brand, customer experience". They regard this as their main competitive advantage. And it is well explained: ‘industrial design' as a creation of the product appearance has moved to the Chinese - the chances you outperform them in therms of speed, price and even quality are neat to zero.
It is quite interesting, that the word "experience" is one of the most difficult for translating into the Russian language...
«Truth cannot be defined, although it can certainly be experienced.
But experience is not a definition. Definition is done by the mind, experience is done by participating. If somebody asks, «What is a dance?» how can you define it? But you can dance and you can know the inner feel of it.»
Osho
Reason #7. From the Knowledge Economy to the Creativity Economy
What does all this mean for businesses?
A new stage in the evolution and, first of all, an urgent search for new type of employees who are able to work with fuzzy, ‘sticky‘ and vague information - the stuff inside employees' and customers' heads so critical for companies survival.
That's why we hear about ‘The Creative Imperative' and observe deep interest of businesses in design, its methods and tools. For apply of such unique design tools, as design iconography, prototyping, scenario planning, storytelling, storyboards, videos have proved themselves as highly efficient in compressing and transferring multiple and complex concepts in the form which is easy to comprehend by a variety of audiences.
Moreover, design thinking being intrinsically synthetic type of thinking - read, leading to innovation - can be highly appropriate to co-create tacit knowledge of the network by:
1. Tapping tacit knowledge
2. Processing it into tangibles
3. Transferring it both inside and outside the company.
'The Knowledge Economy is being eclipsed by the Creativity Economy...
What was once central to corporations -- price, quality, and much of the left-brain, digitized analytical work associated with knowledge - is fast being shipped off to lower-paid, highly trained Chinese and Indians, as well as Hungarians, Czechs, and Russians. Increasingly, the new core competence is creativity - the right-brain stuff that smart companies are now harnessing to generate top-line growth. The game is changing. It isn't just about math and science anymore. It's about creativity, imagination, and, above all, innovation.'
Business Week, 2005
Questions and more information
Ekaterina Khramkova
CEO, Founding director, Lumiknows
MA: Design & Branding Strategy (Brunel University, UK); PhD (Russian Academy of Sciences); MSc (Moscow State University);
Member of the Design Committee by the Russian Ministry of Economic Development;
Lecturer at the British Higher School of Art and Design in Moscow on Design Research, Foresight and Trends Forecasting;
Coordinator for reddot Design Concept in Russia.
In 2005, Ekaterina was awarded a Chevening scholarship from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the British government to enable her to undertake the Masters course in Design and Branding Strategy at Brunel University - one of the first programs in the world designed to bring
benefits of design thinking to the needs of business and society. For the first time in Russia, this prestigious scholarship was given in the area of New Product Development.
Contacts
www.designresearch.ru
Lumiknows RUSSIA: Moscow, St.-Petersburg
New Product Development
+7 495 585 7289
info@designresearch.ru
Speaking Engagement & Coaching
coaching@lumiknows.com
About the Author
Ekaterina Khramkova
CEO, Founding director, Lumiknows
MA: Design & Branding Strategy (Brunel University, UK); PhD (Russian Academy of Sciences); MSc (Moscow State University);
Member of the Design Committee by the Russian Ministry of Economic Development;
Lecturer at the British Higher School of Art and Design in Moscow on Design Research, Foresight and Trends Forecasting;
Coordinator for reddot Design Concept in Russia.
In 2005, Ekaterina was awarded a Chevening scholarship from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the British government to enable her to undertake the Masters course in Design and Branding Strategy at Brunel University - one of the first programs in the world designed to bring benefits of design thinking to the needs of business and society. For the first time in Russia, this prestigious scholarship was given in the area of New Product Development.
what is the difference between these brakes?
im trying to upgrade my rotor and brakes on my 97 ford crown vic. i looked on ebay and saw 3 different kinds and the brands are magnum brakes, cquence brakes, and ERP Cross Drilled brakes (apexlimit). i would like to know which one is recommended and why??
It doesn't matter what brake you buy they are pretty much all the same. Make sure you get the ones with a lifetime warranty so that when you change them next you can just take them off go back and get new ones for free. If your looking for better stopping power you need to change out your calipers for a higher quality calipers.
Osberg dominates tournament at RiverCrest
Special to The Phoenix OAKS — Some would say Jeff Osberg was kind of predictable, others may tend to say he was kind of boring. But nearly everyone would say the former Owen J. Roberts High School standout was absolutely dominating during last week's Golf Association of Philadelphia's Patterson Cup and RiverCrest Golf Club & Preserve.
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